I posted a question, and got a great answer, but there was some additional work to implement it, so I edited the answer for the benefit of future readers. On my edit, I commented added additional info needed to make the solution work
.
Then I saw that my edit was rejected by 3 people with the message This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer.
While I think they are wrong about ...makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer
, that's a matter on which we can disagree.
My question here is why we have reviewers ascribing intention (intended to address the author of the post
) where no such intention is expressed nor implied, and the opposite is stated as a comment?
That strikes me as very un-Stackoverflow. I assume (since I have never reviewed an edit) that they are selecting from a predefined list of reasons, and this was the closest to their opinion. Wouldn't it be better to have separate options for intended to address the author of the post
(to be used when there is evidence of such) and makes no sense as an edit
(which is fairly subjective).
EDIT: the core of my puzzlement is why intended to address the author
and makes no sense
are combined - a reviewer could hold one of those without the other, but they are forced to select both. And how does a reviewer know what the editor's intent was? It's as if the choice was The editor believes in Santa Claus and the edit contains grammatical errors
? A reviewer who rejects a post for grammatical errors is also making a speculative statement about the editor with no evidence.
I'm not sure how the other answer addresses this. If the reason my edit was rejected is that I shouldn't edit an answer to my own question, then shouldn't the reviewer have an option to select You are not allowed to edit an answer to your own question.
makes no sense as an edit
is very broad/vague. You could use that for literally any edit that merits rejection, and it tells the editor nothing about what they did wrong. There used to be a reason along those lines, but it was removed because it was just too vague.